Archive for March, 2007

David Lynch’s Creepy Anti-Littering PSA

March 28th, 2007

Here’s an anti-littering public service announcement made by David Lynch and photographed by Frederick Elmes. The message is clear: trash creates rats who will gnaw away at your existence with their razor sharp teeth and whip your legs with their heavy, hairless tails:

Posted to youtube by bachelormachines. More weird public service announcements here, here, here and here.

Originally posted by Station Manager Ken from WFMU’s Beware of the Blog, ReBlogged by Joanna on Mar 25, 2007 at 03:56 PM

Originally by Station Manager Ken from Eyebeam reBlog on March 25, 2007, 1:56pm

Posted by v on March 28th, 2007

Science Fiction and the City: Film Fest Update!

March 28th, 2007

[Image: Ben Procter].

A few weeks ago I announced that BLDGBLOG and Materials & Applications had teamed up to curate an architectural film fest as part of this year’s Silver Lake Film Festival here in LA.
Well, I have some exciting news to announce: on Tuesday, May 8th, from 8-10pm, inside a converted wind tunnel in Pasadena, we’ll be hosting an evening full of talks and presentations about film, science fiction, space, landscape, and architecture.

[Image: James Clyne].

I have said many times before on this blog that contemporary architecture could learn quite a lot from the spatial and material imaginations on display in both film and science fiction – so perhaps this event will be a good opportunity to explore what that really means.

[Image: Ryan Church].

Though the connections between film and architecture run too deep – and are either too widely known or too conceptually entangled – to discuss in full here, I still think it’s worth pointing out, briefly, a few examples of cinematic thinking in architecture. Or architectural thinking in cinema, as it were.
One of the greatest essays on Piranesi ever written, for instance, was produced by Russian film director Sergei Eisenstein – whose father, interestingly, was an architect.
While studying Piranesi’s notoriously vertiginous etchings of imaginary prisons, Eisenstein felt moved to write an essay about the basic cinematic acts of montage and cutting. If Piranesi’s prisons are anything, Eisenstein suggests, they are spaces edited together from unrelated episodes; they are cinematic.
He calls them “architectural frenzies.”
Inspired by this realization, Eisenstein goes on to say that even film should be reconsidered, on a structural level, as “a sequence of collisions,” a “succession of broken links,” thousands and thousands of different frames and spaces that then unite into a coherent whole. The individual stills of a film sequence – like the individual rooms of a building – thus fuse into an “ecstatic construction.”

[Image: Ryan Church].

Less abstractly, Jonathan Glancey claims, in an old article for The Guardian, that “cinema remains the best place to experience the architectural imagination at full flight.”
Through film, Glancey writes, an audience can get “highly wrought glimpses into future cities; for popular audiences, such films offer thrilling guides as to how our world might look.” He continues:

    What is fascinating, and very much an area for further research, is the close relationship between radical architectural design and the cinema. Much of the best of modern architecture, combining digital and three-dimensional design processes, is cinematic in scope and feeling.

He then concludes, and I strongly echo this sentiment:

    If only the members of Archigram or Superstudio had been able to buy, in the 1960s, the kind of cheap digital technology available on high streets today. They may not have been able to get their dream cities constructed, but they could have visualised them in mini-movies – much more enticing than so many drawings, lectures and models.

After reading something like this, though, I find it very hard not to get excited by things like Unit 15 at the Bartlett School of Architecture, a design studio that “uses film, video, animation and motion graphics to generate, develop, refine and represent architectural proposals.”
It’s also interesting, though, in this context, to point out the work of M. Christine Boyer, and her excellent book The City of Collective Memory.
There, Boyer writes about Edward Gordon Craig, an early 20th-century stage set designer (and son of an architect), whose “architectonic scenery” foregrounded architectural backdrops, turning them into the only action an audience was meant to watch.
For instance, Craig “proposed that a stage in which walls and shapes rose up and opened out, unfolded or retreated in endless motion could become a performance without any actors,” Boyer writes. “The stage thus became a device to receive the play of light rhythmically, creating an endless variety of mobile cubic shapes and varying spaces. Deep wells, stairs, open spaces, platforms, or partitions created a stage of complete mobility, which Craig believed appealed to the imagination.”
The architecture does all the acting for you; the architecture is the film – or the play, as the case may be. The architecture is the storyline.
The space itself is the plot.

[Image: Ben Procter].

So what does all this have to do with cinema and architecture – or even with science fiction and the city?
Well, by talking not to architects but instead to the people who actually design the sets, backdrops, cityscapes, environments, buildings, rooms, etc., in which cinematic action takes place – from X-Men 3 to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory – you should be able to get at least some sense for what architecture can mean, on a narrative level, to those outside the architectural field.
In other words, what do those people who tell stories through and with space actually want from architecture?
How do they use space?
Rather than set out to discover, yet again, what architects think about cinema – or about science fiction, or about stage set design – why not turn the question around? Why not see what architects can learn from spaces, buildings, and cities produced by other fields?

[Image: A sketch by Mark Goerner; here’s a larger version].

Or, to ask another question that won’t necessarily be answered by this event: if Architectural Record bills itself as a magazine about architecture, then why doesn’t it ever cover, say, the apartment complex from Minority Report, or the office lobbies featured in The Matrix? That’s architecture, too.
In any case, Materials & Applications and BLDGBLOG have therefore gathered together four of the most exciting concept artists working in film today to discuss some of these questions, and to talk about their own artistic backgrounds – how they got into film, what they studied to get there, and what imaginative role architecture plays in their creations.
They will each give a short, 15-20 minute talk, with images, and the whole thing will be followed by a Q&A. And, just to mention this again, because I love saying it, this will take place in a converted wind tunnel, formerly used for testing the aerodynamism of experimental vehicles.
But I’ll be posting about the wind tunnel in a few days (complete with some really cool pictures).

[Image: Ben Procter].

The resumes of these four guys, then, put together, cover so much cinematic ground that it’s almost easier to name what they haven’t worked on; nonetheless, here are the speakers – with an abbreviated list of their film production credits.
In alphabetical order, you’ll see Ryan Church, James Clyne, Mark Goerner, and Ben Procter.

[Images: Ryan Church].

Ryan Church has worked on The War of the Worlds, Star Wars II: Attack of the Clones, and Star Wars III: Revenge of the Sith – with stills from each film available on his site.
Some of the landscapes and structures that Ryan has produced are just extraordinary; there’s this titan arch vs. these linked arches; there’s this weird interior full of glowing discs; there’s this thing; there’s the Death Star under construction – etc. etc. etc.
Awesome work can be found all over this page, in fact, including some truly amazing sketches.

[Images: Three environments by Ryan Church; larger versions available here, here, and here].

Check out Ryan’s bio for more.
Moving onward, alphabetically, we find James Clyne, who has worked on A.I. (check out this Caspar David Friedrich-esque landscape, in particular), Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (!), Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Minority Report (including this cityscape and these freeways), Mission to Mars, The War of the Worlds, and X-Men 3, among others.

[Images: James Clyne].

There’s then Mark Goerner, who’s worked on Constantine, Minority Report, The Terminal, and X-Men 2 (including Magneto’s plastic prison), among others. Check out this crashed ship-city, piercing the lunar surface, in both sketch and final versions.

[Image: Reef City by Mark Goerner].

Of course, Mark has also designed a space station.
Ben Procter, finally, has worked on a bewildering number of films, including the forthcoming, feature-length version of The Transformers. His work also appears in Blade 2, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Matrix: Reloaded and The Matrix: Revolutions, Pirates of the Caribbean, The Ring, Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, Superman Returns, and The Terminal, among others.

[Image: Ben Procter].

Ben has produced environments for games such as Need for Speed: Underground, and he’s even helped spatially conceptualize a few music videos for Mariah Carey, Ginuwine, and Busta Rhymes.

[Image: Ben Procter].

His resume has more information (available as a PDF).
So come out if you can on May 8, 2007, from 8-10pm, at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. Hear about film, architecture, and science fiction; learn how these artists were educated and how they found the careers that they did; ask questions about artistic influences, strategies, and intentions; find out what it’s like to work on a Steven Spielberg film; and see some more of their work, from film stills to sketchbooks to video clips.
The former wind tunnel, meanwhile, is absolutely enormous, so there’s no need to worry about reservations or whether you’ll be able to get in. And bring some extra cash, in case you want to purchase one of their instructional books or DVDs; they’re cool guys and deserve the support. And I’ll repost about all this once the event draws closer, complete with address, etc. etc., so don’t worry if you read this post and don’t know how to get there. The event is nearly two months away. Don’t panic.

[Image: A sketch by Mark Goerner; here’s a much larger version].

Last but not least, you can see one or two more images, by all four artists, in my little film fest Flickr set.
Expect more soon…

Originally by Geoff Manaugh from BLDGBLOG

Posted by v on March 28th, 2007

Support the Artist Deduction Bill

March 28th, 2007
Tax_coll

ROYMERSWAELE, Marinus van. Tax Collector, 1542. Wood, 103,7 x 120 cm.
Alte Pinakothek, Munich. Image source

via email (thanks Grace!):

Dear Friends,

The Artist Tax Deduction Bill is finally up for action. Please take the time to support this important bill as its passage will impact all individual artists. Go to the link below to send a message to your representatives and senators. Please forward this information to your mailing list!

Artist Deduction Bill Introduced in the House

03-19-2007: After announcing at the Congressional Arts Breakfast on Arts Advocacy Day that he would be the lead sponsor for the Artist Deduction Bill, Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) introduced the bill on March 14, 2007, joined by Rep. Jim Ramstad (R-MN). Identical to a Senate bill introduced by Sens. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Robert Bennett (R-UT), the bill supports individual artists by allowing them to take a fair-market value tax deduction for tangible works they donate to nonprofit collecting and educational organizations, and it benefits the public by giving them access to more art.

Send a message to your members of Congress asking them to be a co-sponsor of this important bill, H.R. 1524 (House) and S. 548 (Senate).

Originally by joy garnett from NEWSgrist - where spin is art

Posted by v on March 28th, 2007

Visit the Open Rigths Group (UK)

March 28th, 2007
Org_protect_big

Telephone

Image source

I found this post on the website of the UK’s Open Rights Group :

Patent Office want evidence to justify new copyright exceptions for artists

Posted by Michael in Uncategorized, Copyright, Intellectual Property, Computer Law at March 20th, 2007
The Patent Office needs to hear from artists and creators. Please let us help you get in touch.

The Patent Office is charged with implementing the exciting recommendations suggested in the recent Gowers Review of IP.
But they are yet to be convinced of the crucial need for some of these
recommendations, mainly because they’re finding it hard to get in touch
with the relevant practioners. They are looking for concrete examples
of creative practices inhibited by the law, to back up proposed
exceptions for the purposes of “creative, transformative or derivative
works” and “caricature, parody or pastiche”.

Would you, your colleagues, students or collaborators benefit from
these exceptions? Are you working or have you worked on a project
outlawed by the overly-protectionst copyright regime, which would have
benefited from these kinds of exceptions? If so, please get in touch -
info[at]openrightsgroup.org - and share your experience.

Rights holders were of course quick to lobby against these suggested
exceptions. In their opinion the dismal and labour-intensive “must-ask-permission!” culture of copyright-licensing works just fine
as it is. They don’t see the creative and social opportunities in
remixing and poking fun, only the economic-downsides in losing control
of their ‘IP assets’.

But if you are a practicing artist with relevant experiences to
share, please get in touch today so we can show the importance of
copyright exceptions to Patent Office.

Originally by joy garnett from NEWSgrist - where spin is art

Posted by v on March 28th, 2007

Super Mario theme on three trombones

March 28th, 2007

Cory Doctorow:

Josh sez, “My friend is in a local [Portland OR] orchestra, and she got this awesome video of the trombone section performing the music from Super Mario Bros, from an arrangement made by a member of the trombone section in our sister city of Sapporo, Japan. Awesome!”

Link

(Thanks, Josh!)


Originally posted by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing, ReBlogged by Joanna on Mar 21, 2007 at 10:33 AM

Originally by Cory Doctorow from Eyebeam reBlog on March 21, 2007, 8:33am

Posted by v on March 28th, 2007

2.25.07: Marina Abramovic

March 21st, 2007

Went to an event at the Guggenheim with Cindy last night, after spending much of the afternoon together hitting 2 of the many art fair shows in town — The Art Show (a little stodgy, that one) and Scope, which was crowded and fun. The Guggenheim was hosting a film screening and party for Marina Abramovic’s 60th birthday. The film was a documentary about her performances a year or 2 ago of seven classic performance art pieces. It’s a somewhat radical idea in that arena to resurrect a “performance” as one would a play, a work of choreography or a piece of music. Up until recently those performance art pieces tended to survive solely via documentation — photos or videos, mostly — and were never physically “revived” even by their creators. They were thought of as relics of their era, only relevant in the context of a particular place and time and therefore distinct from other types of performance. They were also thought of as intimately linked to their creators — as if only I could sing my songs and no one else was ever allowed to. It sounds weird when you put it that way, but in the art world it was just accepted that that’s the way it would be. Even Beckett’s estate, notoriously finicky, allows performances and even limited interpretation — but very limited — every stage direction must be adhered to, or the lawyers come out as they have quite a few times. Between Abramovic and RoseLee Goldberg’s Performa festival this ingrained attitude has been challenged. The most well known pieces she revived were Vito Acconci’s “Seedbed” in which he masturbates under the floor (while talking) and a Beuys piece in which he mimics giving instruction to a dead hare.

This kind of performance is different from what I do, though there are overlaps. More and more, as time goes by, I acknowledge the audience when I perform; I either speak to them or gesture to them. In general the performance is offered to them, given — and desirous of their approval, at least to some extent. Here much of that is not even considered. That’s not necessarily meant as a criticism, but it does seem to be a fact. In this genre of performance the direction is inward — it is as if the audience were anthropologists watching a scarification or a puberty ritual in the outback or in the highlands of Papua New Guinea. There is no tacit acknowledgement of the audience by the performer — except at the end, when Marina would finish and there would be applause and she would smile and once she even bowed. But those moments seemed to be exceptions.

Most of the time it is a private personal ritual that is being enacted. A personal rite of passage — which might be why some are loath to view them as performances — that smacks of “show” and, God forbid, entertainment. These are rituals in which it may be important to have witnesses, and maybe that is exactly the right word for the audience relationship in this case. The audience is not expected to interact. In some cases the audience heckled her — but she didn’t react. The ritual must be completed as prescribed for the magic to take effect. Reportedly one crazed audience member rushed the “stage” during one piece (Marina was posed like Patty Hearst as Tanya, only in this case her leather trousers below the machine gun she cradled were completely crotchless.) The guy was stopped before he could reach her. During another piece where she was completely naked and incising a five-pointed star into her belly someone called the fire department reporting a woman mutilating herself. The firemen came and when one saw her (she was lying on a bed of ice at that point) he declared she was “totally hot” and went to get the other guys so they could see, too. They came back the next day again, but it was another piece and she had clothes on.

Anyway. Most of the time there is no visible obvious emotional expression by the performer in this genre: everything is stoic, and ritually done with a straight face. I sensed intense emotion inside, but it is kept under wraps, tightly held, which in some ways makes it even more powerful. The “mutilation” piece included a recording of a song about a Slavic people, lyrics wailing how “no-one understands us and we are doomed to endless wars”. Marina is from Montenegro, bordering on Serbia, so one can feel the anguish of recent history — history still playing itself out. Wounded communal pride and suffering penetrating into even little villages and deeply ingrained among friends and relatives. The piece seemed to be expressing a need to do penance but pissed off about it, too. Penance needs a witness to be effective, even if that witness is only God, so that age-old religious impulse sure seems to have some weird link to this performance style — people are constantly mutilating themselves in these pieces, nailing themselves to cars or grotesquely stretching and distorting their bodies and features. Heal us, heal me, they seem to say. Or, Christ-like, let me atone for all the shit in the world.

Sometimes these pieces verge close to David Blaine’s stunts or those of Houdini and others popular entertainers, but usually this work maintains a crucial distance from those stunts and it stays closer to the endurance feats of shamans than those of vaudeville magicians. With the latter, there may, in some cases, be a trick, a sleight of hand, some clever skill that deceives the viewer — but here what you see is absolutely real.

In an age where the common religious rituals are irrelevant, forgotten or discounted these are maybe attempts at some cathartic replacements. We as spectators and audience members benefit, too — it may seem that we’re not “included”, but merely having witnessed the event, we are. Many of these pieces seem to come from Middle Europe, where religion, wars, waves of nasty regimes and outsider status from the rest of Europe combined with hard economic circumstances to make one’s body the most available and likely art material. Chinese contemporary art a decade or more ago was similar.

There are elements of ritual in pop and contemporary theater performances — sometimes obviously, as in De La Guarda, Meridith Monk, Pina Bausch and other folks — but also in pop music too. Sonic Youth and Boredoms, The Stooges, Cat Power, of course they are all enacting cathartic rituals for our benefit, but even more traditional shows contain some element, often invisible, of a cathartic ritual enacted for the joint benefit of viewer and viewed.

Originally by David Byrne from David Byrne Journal on February 25, 2007, 8:36am

Posted by v on March 21st, 2007

Art Joke Bumper Sticker Contest - Voting

March 21st, 2007

Whoa…that’s an awesome response to the bumper sticker contest…thanks to all for the bounty of chuckles! To simplify the voting, I’ll ask that you give just the letter for your first and second favorites. The #1 fave will receive two points, the #2 fave 1 point.

This being an art joke contest, a few of the entries were visual in nature (although I’m not sure I understand the first one…anyone?):

A. The words ‘retard’ in white letters within a red-colored field bumper sticker.
B.
http://store1.yimg.com/I/marfabkco_1851_6693115
C.
http://www.cremasterfanatic.com/Art/Art%20Tumbnails/t043.jpg

Then there was a cornucopia of conceptual, critical, and punny ones:

D. art is not what you think
E. I paid $92,000 to Yale and all I got was a lousy solo show in Chelsea?!?
F. My parents paid $92,000 to Yale and all I got was a lousy solo show in Chelsea?!?
G. Act kind of random and practice beauty sense.
H. Giraffeti: Vandalism spray-painted very, very high
I. The Gogh Van
J. Don’t blame me I voted for zombie Joseph Beuys
K. Imagine art
L. this could be your art
M. WWDJD?
N. Jackson Pollock is my Co-Pilot (You think I’d let him drive?)
O. if it doesn’t work make it bigger, if it still doesn’t work make a lot of them
P. I won an art blog joke bumper sticker contest and all i got was this lousy bumper sticker!
Q. my other car is a warhol
R. Expose yourself to art (with the trench coat open).
S. Ceci n’est pas une voiture
T. Take Something. Crash Something Into It. Crash Something Into It Again.
U. My Other Car is a Painting of a Car
V. I’d rather be famous
W. art is for those whose drugs stopped working
X. art is for those who cant handle reality
Y. My artist is an honor roll student at the Conceptual School of Abstract Thought
Z. -art-GUNRUNGIRL-art-
ZZ. Dumb Art Joke
AA. Jesus loves you, everyone else thinks your an asshole
BB. I HEART MOTI HASSON
CC. The End of Art (rear bumper)
DD. Rear Vision Art (front)
EE. Art We Know, and Trust In
FF. Left-hand Artist at the Wheel
GG. My mother left me for an Artist
HH. Right Art Now!
II. Kiss Me Abstract
JJ. Concentrate on the signal not the art!
KK. Motor Art High Way
LL. Pick up the Phoneme - Art is Calling!

And finally there are those possibly too long to fit on a bumper sticker, but worthy all the same:

MM. Richard Serra, Mark DiSuvero, and the ghost of David smith walk into a bar. Just then, Richard Serra turns to the ghost of David Smith and says, “are you going to let him talk to you like that?”
NN. “Car” — 2006, Enamel on sheet metal, glass, steel, vinyl, aluminum, chrome, artificial rubber, hydraulics, electronics. Collection: The Artist

UPDATE: Yikes…like what am I smokin’? I forgot the the one that started this all

OO. Those who can do. Those who can’t Duchamp.

And the one from the orignal post.

PP. If you like conceptual art think about honking.

Originally by Edward_ from edward_ winkleman

Posted by v on March 21st, 2007

[Untitled]

March 21st, 2007

living-in-the-videogramo.gif

»Living In The Eternal Mortal Edge« and

video.jpg

»Holograma en la Espuma de Citerea« by Videogramo.

Originally by mail from VVORK on March 11, 2007, 9:18pm

Posted by v on March 21st, 2007

The Green Line

March 21st, 2007

Up until today I had not heard of artist Francis Alÿs, who apparently was trained as an engineer and architect, but, for the past 20 years has lived in Mexico producing paintings, films, sculptures, and his particular brand of performance art, or, rather, performance walks – which I’ll say are extremely cool.


For example, his latest project, which comes together in an installation for David Zwirner in Manhattan (his first solo gallery show in a decade, we are told by the New York Times), chronicles a 15-mile walk he took through Jerusalem with nothing other than a map and some leaky cans of green paint. His intention, following along a detailed indication of the “Green Line” according to the armistice after the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, was to trace the Green Line’s actual geography today with a bag full of paint cans dribbling a broken, confused, and somewhat inaccessible outline of where it should technically be observed.
In a film Julien Devaux made of the walk, he is seen hiking down streets, through yards and parks, past military checkpoints and over rocky abandoned terrain, all relatively with ease and without much notice or harassment, surprisingly enough.

The article goes on to describe his work as “an art of symbolic gesture, a kind of acted-out metaphor, produced by a body or bodies in motion.” His own body-in-motion generated inscription of the Green Line calls attention, in a beautifully subversive way, to the actual line of concrete barriers, security walls, and network of checkpoints that in all essence completely violates the geography of the original agreed-upon border line.

I love the idea, and can’t believe it had not already been done: painting the actual delineation of the Green Line for all to observe, while also, in some obtuse way, tracing the insidious discrepancy of the present halved geography of matrix-dissected removal of Palestinian access to the ancient city. And I would say, his project needs to be extended beyond just the 15-mile stroll through Jerusalem. Why not devote a massive coordination to painting in the Green Line to its completion through out the entire Occupied Territories? Locals could take the torch and finish this themselves.

While “The Green Line, as Mr. Alÿs reinscribes it” (according to the NYT), is radically fluid: the next rainstorm, some traffic, a crowd of passing feet would, and surely did, obliterate it”, I must admit, this is one instance where I could care less about the ephemeral and fleeting quality of the performance art nature of the piece.
In fact, I wish this line could remain in tact permanently.
To go with it, I wish there were a series of street signs or some other project that would build upon this one, guiding folks along the actual path of the Green Line as it was intended. It maybe be cheesy, but you put on some headphones, unfold a specialized map and take an audio tour of the contested territories, and learn specifically about the history of the conflict, the making of the apartheid wall for all its own flexibility and shifty strategic routing and re-routing, listen to personal accounts of localized struggles along the way, epic survival stories of violence, of homes split down the middle, farms axed by the wall — a walk of shame tour — all the while, comparing the current hard nosed outline of the occupation with all its lack of correspondence to the desingations of the Green Line’s earlier border consensus.

Needless to say, if I were in New York City I would check this out. In addition to the film, included in the show is apparently a number of archival peices on the original Green Line (maps and documents), as well as interviews with “contemporary Israeli, Palestinian and European pundits” that form, I guess, a kind of catalogue. Oh, and apparently some fabricated piecemeal guns he fancied out of scraps and found materials.“Sometimes Doing Something Poetic Can Become Political, and Sometimes Doing Something Political Can Become Poetic” at the David Zwirner gallery.

Originally by Bryan Finoki from Subtopia

Posted by v on March 21st, 2007

13 Most Beautiful Avatars

March 21st, 2007

Intro_thirteen

via NYTimes Art in Review:

EVA AND FRANCO MATTES
13 Most Beautiful Avatars

Postmasters
459 West 19th Street, Chelsea
Through March 17

Eva and Franco Mattes have gone relatively legitimate and, it should be added, salable. The duo, also known as 0100101110101101.org,
is expert at various forms of duplicity and intervention. They have
mounted an extensive ad campaign for a nonexistent movie, “United We
Stand
“; briefly kidnapped the Nike logo for a public installation in
Vienna; created a fictional artist with a real career; and executed
various forms of media hacking and culture jamming.

Now they
are making portraits, or, more accurately, digital prints on canvas of
the avatars — digital surrogates — that people create to become part of
the online virtual world called Second Life.

Parrenohuygh_oftheworld


< Ann Lee; Anywhere Out of The World (2000),
Philippe Parreno [Link]


What’s remarkable
is the eerie effectiveness of these works as paintings in the
nonvirtual world. With their flat colors, slightly blocky features and
assertive hair, these images of men and women exude a sexy artifice
that is both seductive and a parody of seductiveness. They also evoke
Ann Lee, the manga character featured in videos by Pierre Huyghe and
Philippe Parreno, and the portraits of Alex Katz and Richard Phillips.

It
may be that the technical imperfections of the Second Life software
make up for the lack of facture. Such kinks will eventually be ironed
out, and the avatars will be completely realistic — at which point,
these works could verge on unique. — ROBERTA SMITH

Originally by joy garnett from NEWSgrist - where spin is art

Posted by v on March 21st, 2007